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Facebook adds ranking of stories in news feeds

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Facebook’s quest to be a personalized newspaper for the Internet age continued on Tuesday with tweaks aimed at making sure members spy hot stories from their friends.

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Changes to the leading social network’s formula for figuring out which posts will be of interest included “bumping” up potentially intriguing stories that went unnoticed during prior visits to Facebook.

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“It is hard for users to get back to old things; you have to scroll through things you have already seen,” Facebook news feed team engineering Lars Backstrom said while discussing the latest changes.

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“We wanted to make it so people weren’t missing important stories that didn’t make top slots but were just below the fold.”

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Signals weighed in the machine learning algorithm were modified to bump-up a story considered more interesting than fresher material that formerly got priority simply for being newer.

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“We tweaked the model,” Backstrom said, noting that about 30,000 signals are balanced in the algorithm.

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“Instead of just taking the new stories, we would take all stories that were new to you, that you haven’t seen, even if it isn’t the freshest.”

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A test of the change showed that the number of stories people read in news feeds rose to 70% from 57% with “bumping,” according to Facebook.

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“Story Bumping is going to be a really nice tool for people if they…are sitting with a Facebook account and have run out of things to look at,” said Facebook vice president of product Chris Cox. “It will bump up new stuff.”

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News feeds were also modified to take into account the “last actor” a member interacted with and then give that friend’s posts temporary priority since they seem to be up to something interesting.

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“We wanted to capture your current state of mind as you were using Facebook,” Backstrom said.

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“A lot of signals are long term, such as the relationship with each friend; we wanted a real time factor.”

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Facebook’s ranking software assigns numerical scores to the roughly 1,500 stories typically eligible for delivery to a member’s news feed and displays the top 300.

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Powerful factors for ranking are relationships, along with how often a member comments, shares, “likes,” or otherwise acts on posts of friends. Hiding posts sinks content from that person in news feed rankings.

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“Our goal is to create the best personalized newspaper for each of our readers,” Backstrom said.

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Facebook engineers are experimenting with ways for News Feeds to better handle chronological posts, such as a friend firing off play-by-play updates from a sporting event.

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Backstrom’s team meets each Tuesday to brainstorm ways to improve the Facebook news feed, with worthwhile ideas tested internally among workers or with a tiny fraction of the social network’s more than one billion members.

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“It starts with intuition and then that gets written into code as a feature,” said Cox. “Then we look at interactions.”

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Ads displayed as promoted posts in news feeds are handled separately from content generated by people’s friends or family members at Facebook, according to the ranking team.

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“We figure out the most relevant news feed with the organic content, and then, as a newspaper or television program might do, we create advertising slots,” said Facebook product manager Will Cathcart.

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Backstrom compared the job of ranking news feed posts to the challenge faced by Internet search engines Google or Bing when it comes to quickly determining optimal results for queries.

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“Facebook is one of the only places where you have a problem on the same scale as what Google or Bing is doing but you have to use different techniques because of the personal aspects of it,” Backstrom said.

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